Spaceborne microwave imagers are vital for monitoring global precipitation due to their wide swath and high sensitivity. This study proposes a deep learning approach that integrates a U-Net with a multi-task learning (MTL) framework. The model was separately trained over land and ocean using GPM Microwave Imager (GMI) brightness temperatures, with collocated precipitation rates and types from the Dual-frequency Precipitation Radar (DPR) as labels. This combines the accuracy of radars with the coverage of imagers to produce high-precision, wide-swath precipitation estimates. In the MTL setup, near-surface precipitation rate retrieval is the main task, and precipitation type classification is the auxiliary task. A composite loss (weighted MSE and quantile regression) is used for the main task, and weighted cross-entropy for the auxiliary task. Residual blocks and an attention mechanism are incorporated to improve physical representation and generalization, thereby significantly enhancing the model’s capability to retrieve heavy precipitation. The model was trained on 2015–2024 GPM data and evaluated on an independent six-month 2025 GMI dataset. Compared to a standard U-Net, the MTL model achieved significant gains: Pearson Correlation Coefficient (PCC) increased by 9.7% (ocean) and 13.7% (land), and Critical Success Index (CSI) by 10.7% (ocean) and 10.8% (land). The method was also applied to the FY-3G Microwave Radiation Imager (MWRI-RM). In case studies, it outperformed the official product, achieving average increases of 20.1% in PCC and 15.7% in CSI, respectively. Validation against FY-3G Precipitation Measurement Radar (June–August 2024) yielded over ocean PCC = 0.757, RMSE = 1.588 mm h−1, MAE = 0.355 mm h−1; over land PCC = 0.691, RMSE = 2.007 mm h−1, MAE = 0.692 mm h−1. The study demonstrates that the MTL-enhanced U-Net significantly improves the accuracy of spaceborne microwave imager rainfall retrieval and shows robust practical applicability.
Xiang et al. (Sun,) studied this question.